This documentation contains information about both PHP 4 and PHP 5, with
   some added migration and compatibility notes regarding PHP 3. Behaviour,
   parameter, return value and other changes between different PHP
   versions are documented in notes and inline text in the manual.
  
   Documentation partly exists for the CVS version of PHP, which
   always means the very latest development version. This has yet to
   be released so is only available through the CVS version handling system, 
   or via a snapshot. So be aware that
   features marked "available in CVS" are typically unavailable. These 
   features, though, will most likely be available in the next stable version 
   of PHP. To download the CVS version, see the anonymous
   CVS access page.
  
   Also, documentation may exist for PHP versions that aren't yet released.
   (something like PHP 5.0.0 while the latest stable version
   is 4.3.x). Most of the time, this is not an error in the documentation.
   Explanation is often added for features not available in the current
   PHP release, but will be available as a known future PHP version.
   Typically, PHP only adds new features in major releases otherwise only bugs
   are fixed. Using the A.B.C versioning format, a major release increments A 
   or B whereas minor releases increment C. So for example it's not uncommon 
   for a feature to be documented as available in PHP x.1.x when the latest 
   release is PHP x.0.x. Also note that the manual is written in present 
   tense, not future tense.
  
   Many times the PHP manual lists "Default Values" for PHP directives. These 
   values are based on php.ini-dist and not 
   php.ini-recommended. They also refer to the latest  
   version of PHP. See the PHP directive 
   appendix for details on these values and changes.